Posted by Todd Zywicki:
WINE WARS, PART 7--WEBB-KENYON ACT:

   The enactment of the Webb-Kenyon Act is consistent with the history
   that came before it in reconciling the state��s police power over
   local affairs with the federal government��s power over interstate
   commerce. As noted in Part 5, under the traditional balance of power,
   the states had essentially plenary power to regulate the manufacture
   and consumption of alcohol pursuant to its police power (including
   imposing state-wide prohibition), but did not have the power to
   discriminate against interstate commerce (Walling v. Michigan). But
   under the prevailing interstate commerce clause jurisprudence of the
   19th century, states could prohibit internal manufacture and sale of
   alcohol, but could not prohibit its importation and resale in its
   ��original package.�� This effected a perverse discrimination in favor
   of interstate commerce. As noted in Part 6, the Wilson Act attempted
   to correct this problem by providing that alcohol imported into the
   state for sale would be treated the same as local liquor. Moreover,
   the Supreme Court held in Scott v. Donald that the Wilson Act did not
   authorize states to discriminate against out-of-state sellers of
   alcohol. But the Wilson Act also left a loophole, in that it did not
   allow dry states to prohibit the importation of alcohol for personal
   use.
   The Webb-Kenyon Act was passed in 1913 to enable the states to close
   this remaining loophole that essentially discriminated in favor of
   out-of-state sellers of alcohol and undermined the states�� ability to
   enforce their laws in dry states. Webb-Kenyon prohibited, as a matter
   of federal law, ��[t]he shipment or transportation�� of alcohol into a
   State of intoxicating liquor that ��is intended, by any person
   interested therein, to be received, possessed, sold, or in any manner
   used, either in the original package or otherwise, in violation of any
   law of such State.�� Webb-Kenyon, therefore, was an enforcement law,
   not a substantive law�Xthe substance of Webb-Kenyon was grounded in
   state laws enacted pursuant to their police power. Thus, state laws
   first had to be a valid substantive exercise of the state��s police
   power before it was incorporated into Webb-Kenyon and could be applied
   to interstate shipments of liquor. Thus, there was no indication that
   Webb-Kenyon was intended to modify the traditional limits on the state
   police power that forbade states from using the police power to
   discriminate against interstate commerce. Instead, the initial law
   that the state sought to enforce against interstate commerce must
   itself be an externally valid exercise of the state��s police power.
   McCormick v. Brown, 286 US 131 (1932).
   As Senator Kenyon himself stated about the Act, its purpose was to
   enable the states to better effectuate their police powers by
   eliminating the discrimination in favor of out-of-state sellers. He
   said: ��This bill, if enacted would not be a law to bring about
   prohibition. It would not be a law to stop personal use of
   intoxicating liquors ,,m Its purpose, and its only purpose, is to
   remove the impediment existing as to the States in the exercise of
   their police powers regarding the traffic or control of intoxicating
   liquors within their own borders.�� 49 Cong. Rec. 760. Other
   supporters of the Act echoed Senator Kenyon��s views. Senator Sanders,
   for instance, indicated that the Act was designed to avoid the
   Court��s precedents holding that a ��State [could] regulate the
   quality of liquor sold within the State, but it [could] not regulate
   the quality of liquor sold from outside the State.�� The only effect
   he added, was that ��It only stops the business of selling liquor
   within dry territory by persons outside that territory in violation of
   law.��
   Webb-Kenyon, therefore, was intended to be a shield to protect dry
   states from being forced to receive imports in violation of its state
   laws, not to be a sword for wet states to engage in economic warfare
   against the products of other states.
   The Supreme Court also recognized that Webb-Kenyon was merely an
   effort to extend the Wilson Act to reach this remaining hole in the
   states�� enforcement power. As the Supreme Court noted in upholding
   the constitutionality of Webb-Kenyon, ��Reading the Webb-Kenyon Law in
   the light thus thrown upon it by the Wilson Act and the decisions of
   this court ... there is no room for doubt that it was enacted simply
   to extend that which was done by the Wilson Act.�� Clark Distilling
   Co. v. W. Maryland Ry. Co., 242 U.S. 311, 323-24 (1917). In
   particular, the court held, the purpose of the Webb-Kenyon Act was
   ��to prevent the immunity characteristic of interstate commerce from
   being used to permit the receipt of liquor through such commerce in
   states contrary to their laws, and thus in effect afford a means by
   subterfuge and indirection to set such laws at naught.�� Clark
   Distilling Co., 242 U.S. at 323-324. In contrast, nothing in the
   legislative history or elsewhere suggests that Congress intended to
   modify or repeal the non-discrimination principle of the Wilson Act
   recognized in Donald, which is particularly noteworthy in that the
   Court had decided Donald more than a decade beforehand.
   In fact, contemporaneous court decisions applying Webb-Kenyon
   expressly held that the nondiscrimination principle of the Wilson Act
   was preserved in Webb-Kenyon. Interpreting Webb-Kenyon in 1916, for
   instance, the South Carolina Supreme Court held: ��The act of Congress
   of March 1, 1913, known as the Webb Kenyon Act, * * * does divest
   intoxicating liquors shipped into a state in violation of its laws of
   their interstate character and withdraw from them the protection of
   interstate commerce, [but] it evidently contemplated the violation of
   only valid state laws. It was not intended to confer and did not
   confer upon any state the power to make injurious discriminations
   against the products of other states which are recognized as subjects
   of lawful commerce by the law of the state making such
   discriminations, nor the power to make unjust discriminations between
   its own citizens.�� Brennen v. Southern Express Co., 106 S.C. 102, 90
   S.E. 402, 404 (1916).
   Indeed, it was well-understood for decades (based on cases such as
   Brennen and other similar cases of the era) that Webb-Kenyon did not
   permit discrimination against interstate commerce. See Note, 85 U. Pa.
   L. Rev. 322 (1946-1937) (��The aim of the legislation, culminating in
   the Webb-Kenyon Act, which preceded the Twenty-First Amendment was to
   prevent the exclusive power of Congress over interstate commerce from
   rendering nugatory state police regulation of the liquor traffic.��);
   Rogers, Interstate Commerce in Intoxicating Liquors Before the
   Webb-Kenyon Act, 4 Va L. Rev. 174 (1916); Howard S. Friedman, 21
   Cornell L.Q. 504 (1935-1936) (��The cases under the Webb-Kenyon Act
   uphold state prohibition and regulation in the exercise of the police
   power yet they clearly forbid laws which discriminate arbitrarily and
   unreasonably against liquor produced outside of the state.��) Note, 55
   Yale L.J. 817 (1945-1946) (noting that under the Act ��it was
   successively reiterated that only uses specifically forbidden by state
   law were prohibited, that interference with interstate commerce was
   permissible only in the exercise of valid state police power, and that
   discriminatory state statutes did not represent proper exercises of
   such power.��). Brennen and similar cases simply evidenced the
   prevailing consensus that Webb-Kenyon did not create a new power for
   states to discriminate against interstate commerce.
   Following Prohibition and its repeal, there was some concern that the
   enactment of the National Prohibition Act (which had implemented the
   18th Amendment) had implicitly repealed Webb-Kenyon. In particular, it
   was thought that the National Prohibition Act may have eliminated the
   states�� authority to define the term ��liquor�� pursuant to their
   state police power. Indeed, this challenge was raised expressly in
   McCormick v. Brown. In order to quiet this objection, in 1935 Congress
   reenacted Webb-Kenyon. As one commentator observed in 1938, ��Most
   congressmen seem to have believed that the Webb-Kenyon Act was still
   in effect, but to make certain, it was reenacted in 1935.�� 7 Geo.
   Wash. L. Rev. 406 (1938-1939).
   This is where things stood at the time of the enactment of national
   prohibition by the 18th Amendment.

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